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The mortgage leader

The mortgage leader

Escrow Tab Earns MISMO Certification

Clients can have confidence that MISMO standards are deployed as they were ‘intended’ to be.

Escrow Tab has received MISMO Software Compliance certification for their paperless closing technology.

Escrow Tab provides a straightforward, secure signing technology by providing a proprietary paperless tablet that replicates the signing process. After the borrower signs, the documents are returned to the lender in PDF format along with an original unsigned document file for reference.

“MISMO Software Certification is an important step for all mortgage technology providers,” said Kolin Porter, CEO of Escrow Tab. “As demand for our paperless signing technology increases, our clients can trust that we are using MISMO standards the way they are intended.”

“We congratulate Escrow Tab for earning their certification,” said Rick Hill, EVP of MISMO.  “Premiere Certification is a significant achievement. Escrow Tab’s independently obtained certification demonstrates their commitment to the use of cost-saving and error-reducing MISMO standards.” Escrow Tab attained Premiere Level Certification the highest level that the Mortgage Industry Standards Maintenance Organization, or MISMO offers to the industry.

The MISMO Certification Program provides assurance that a technology provider’s products demonstrate compliance with MISMO standards and best practices. The Premiere Level certification includes an assessment by an independent, MISMO approved, third-party-assessment company.

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Waters Wants to Raise Reg Scrutiny on Servicers

By Sam Evans

Mortgage servicers will be forced to operate under more regulatory scrutiny if a proposed bill becomes law. That’s because the legislation would increase the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s oversight of mortgage servicers that conduct business with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—with the aim to protect borrowers from foreclosures.

Congresswoman Maxine Waters (D-CA), Ranking Member of the House Committee on Financial Services, introduced H.R. 6102, the Homeowner Mortgage Servicing Fairness Act of 2018, which “continues the fight to ensure hardworking Americans can remain in their homes,” according to a statement from her office.

[caption id="attachment_5430" align="alignleft" width="98"] Rep Waters: Claims mortgage servicers are practicing ‘bad behavior.'[/caption]

“Borrowers can’t choose their servicer so it’s especially important that Congress provide strong protections to prevent servicers from taking advantage of borrowers and to protect borrowers from foreclosure,” said Waters. “This bill will implement common-sense reforms to ensure that servicers are giving borrowers every possible opportunity to avoid foreclosure.”

According to the legislation, in view of the heightened reliance by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on unilateral reviews of borrowers for loss mitigation in place of reviews of applications initiated by borrowers, there is an increased need for oversight to bring accountability to the loss- mitigation review process. In addition, borrowers have faced “wide-ranging problems with their mortgage servicers, including errors that have cost some borrowers money and have cost others their homes.” Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac own or guarantee nearly 60% of all mortgage loans.

Borrowers have also had to contend with lapses in basic mortgage servicing functions, such as inaccurate monthly statements, improperly credited payments, improper escrow handling, and improper servicing transfers. The failures led the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to initiate enforcement actions against nine bank and non-bank mortgage servicers, from 2013 through 2017, for ‘‘mismanaging the loss-mitigation process, mistreating mortgage borrowers who were trying to save their homes from foreclosure and failing borrowers at every stage of the mortgage servicing process.”

The legislation is designed to deliver the following protections to borrowers, according to the statement:

  • Enhances FHFA oversight of servicers who conduct business with Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac;
  • Requires documentation of servicer behavior and FHFA evaluation of the services provided to borrowers;
  • Penalizes servicer failure to meet minimum standards established by the FHFA.

“Mortgage servicers play a critical role in determining whether homeowners experiencing financial hardships will be forced out of their homes,” said Waters. “However, despite the lessons learned during the foreclosure crisis, we continue to uncover evidence of bad behavior by our nation’s mortgage servicers.

Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto, D-Nev., and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., sponsored companion measures in the upper chamber.The legislation is supported by the National Consumer Law Center and the National Fair Housing Alliance, but neither organization responded to requests for comments.

 

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Single-Family Rent Prices Increased 2.7% in March

[caption id="attachment_5423" align="alignleft" width="142"] Molly Boesel: Rents are increasing in most cities across the U.S.[/caption]

Across the U.S., rents increased 2.7 percent in March, with the largest increase found in low-end rental prices. That’s because low rental home inventory, relative to demand, caused single-family rental prices to increase, according to Corelogic’s Single-Family Rent Index, which analyzes price changes nationally and among 20 metropolitan areas.

Year-over-year single-family rent price increases have slowed since February 2016, when they peaked at 4.2 percent, though they have increased since 2010. “Most metropolitan areas are seeing steady rent increases both month over month and year over year, with [southern metropolitan areas] showing the fastest growth,” said Molly Boesel, principal economist at CoreLogic.

Rent prices among low-end increased 3.9 percent in March 2018, a drop from a 4.4 percent increase in March 2017. Low-end properties are those with rent prices less than 75 percent of the regional median. While prices for low-end rentals are still outpacing the high-end market, a decrease in the growth rate could signal that prices are beginning to stabilize.

High-end rentals, or properties with rental prices greater than 125 percent of a region’s median rent, pulled down national rent growth in March 2018. High-end rent prices increased 2.3 percent year over year in March 2018, up from 1.8 percent compared to March of 2017.

Among the 20 metropolitan areas, Las Vegas had the highest year-over-year increase in single-family rents in March 2018 at 5.5 percent compared with March 2017, followed by Phoenix 5.4 percent, and Orlando, 5.2 percent. For the fifth consecutive month, Honolulu was the only metro with decreasing rent prices, declining 0.4 percent year over year in March 2018.

Metro areas with limited new construction, low rental vacancies and strong local economies that attract new employees tend to have stronger rent growth. Both Orlando and Phoenix experienced high year-over-year rent growth, driven by employment growth of 3.5 percent and 3.2 percent year over year respectively.

This is compared with the national employment growth average of 1.6 percent, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Of the 20 metros analyzed, Chicago experienced the lowest employment growth, which could be a factor in its low rent growth of 0.6 percent. Rent prices continue to increase in disaster-struck areas like the Houston metro area, which experienced growth of 3.4 percent year over year in March 2018. This is up from a 2.7 percent increase in February 2018 and a 1.1 percent increase in October 2017, which was the first rent increase for Houston since April 2016.

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